The point is this: eternal life is something we have to choose by ourselves. It can not be forced on us.
Really? I would take from the bible more than one instance where "forcing" most definitely appeared to hold true, both ways.
(Just like a magician's "forcing" a card choice on someone which they think they have chosen freely)
If there is no such thing as luck, change or randomness, (which I have repeatedly been told is the position of Christianity, lest divine authority be constrained) then I am constantly surrounded by a sea of events which, despite my inclination to see them as random, or chance, are nothing of the kind but each is *arranged* to particular outcomes, happenings or non-happenings.
Every die roll, every decision changed by a scrap of weather, or a train running early or late...
This is shepherding. Gates and walls being moved **to purpose**
If you'd like a biblical account, Paul being struck down with visions, and blindness, would come a pretty long way up the scale of "being forced" even if he technically had a free(?) decision still to make.
Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch, rather similarly.
People, objects, timings... all mover around to produce a situation... where is the free will.
If Christianity is right, then every lottery winner is hand-picked, not chosen at random, ands every person struck by lightning... well, we're back to the Greek image or personally hurled thunderbolts. Those hit multiple times (two cases of six hits or over that I'm aware of) might have grounds for thoughts of being persecuted, rather of just being unlucky.
But it would be exactly what God wanted.
The same for every unusual instance, good or bad.
No "risk", no "chance", and therefore little to no free will
Chris.